SECTION 2 Optional Translation (20 points)
避暑山庄位于承德市区北部,是清代最大的皇家园林。
清朝康熙皇帝在为巩固多民族国家的统一,安塞固疆的多次北巡途中,见这里风景秀丽,气候宜人,离京师又近,遂于1703年在此修建避暑山庄。此项工程历经康熙、乾隆两代,用了87年时间才告完工。康熙、乾隆每年有半年时间在这里避暑和处理政务。清朝以后,山庄遭到严重破坏。解放后,人民政府把山庄列为全国重点文物保护单位,并拨巨款进行修复,使之成为国内外游客消夏和游览的场所。
避暑山庄规模宏大,占地560万平方米,宫墙长达20华里。山庄分宫殿区和苑景区两部分,景观丰富,秀丽如画。整个山庄楼堂殿阁鳞次栉比,寺观庵斋遍布山壑;绿草如茵,林木苍翠;山峦起伏,峡谷幽深。
第1题
女士们,先生们:
英国以其灿烂的文化,众多的发明创造为世界文明和进步做出了巨大的贡献,也对中国社会的发展产生了重要的影响。改革开放以来,中国积极提倡学习、吸收包括英国在内的世界各国先进的科学技术、管理经验和优秀文化成果,以促进自己的现代化进程。中国一贯重视英国在欧洲及世界的地位和作用。中英都是联合国安理会常任理事国,在维护世界和平、促进共同发展方面肩负着重大责任,也存在着广泛的共同利益。我们应该站在战略高度,以长远眼光来看待中英关系,希望双方多来往,多了解,多协商,多合作。
第2题
了巨大变化。
现代上海随处可见的是起重机。一座座摩天大厦拔地而起,其中不乏世界最高的楼。
上海处于中国东海岸的中部,距长江入东海的入海口仅20公里。由于通航,上海几个世纪以来都是贸易中心。
而同时上海并没有因为着眼经济增长而忽略高雅文化的发展。上海博物馆、艺术馆、大剧院等著名机构使上海在文化方面独领风骚。
第3题
往来中,我经常见到您的名字,久仰了。
B: This is my first visit to the metropolis of Guangzhou and I'm deeply impressed by what I've seen here.
A:您到这儿已经好几天了吧?去过哪些地方呢?
B: Yes, I've been round the city, and seen some famous sites of historical interest. I enjoyed the visits very much, especially the visits to the museums.
A: 您这么喜欢我们的城市,真是太好了。我想您也喜欢我们的商务建议吧。不知道您给我们带来了什么好消息?
B: Well, I think we have explained to you in our correspondence why we could not accept your proposal. As you know, what you intend to buy from us will involve the whole factory equipment including the necessary accessories and parts. That's really a tremendous amount of work as well as money which are beyond our means.
A:贵公司是世界上著名的跨国公司,电机业的龙头老大,我们要买的这个成套设备对你们来说根本算不了什么。
B: But, Mr. Xia, you should understand that ours is a branch and our plan must be approved by the board of directors of the multinational before it is put into practice.
A:我能理解。跨国公司子公司的财务都是独立核算、自负盈亏的。我了解贵公司,单独制造我们要买的这些成套设备对你们来说是毫无问题的,况且必要的时候你们总部还会给予财务帮助呢。
B: Oh, I agree on that point. But you see, even if our head office gives us any financial aid, interest has to be paid just the same as a loan from a commercial bank. By the way, what about the banker's guarantee?
A:我们会请中国银行担保。您有什么具体建议吗?
B: Yes. I propose that payment be made by installments, that is, after each shipment we will send you the Bs/L and other necessary documents through our bank and yours — the Bank of China. To ensure the payment, the Bank of China should give us a written letter to the effect that they will guarantee the payment if the buyer fails to do so. And the letter of guarantee should reach us two months before shipment is due, as stipulated in the contract.
A:对于您的这个建议我要带回去向我们的总经理汇报。我们公司要对这个问题进行研究,待我们拿出最终方案后,我们再约时间讨论好吗?
B: OK. I am looking forward to the good news.
第4题
可见。
通过购买国库券,中国向美国消费者和政府提供着廉价资金。如果人民币转而盯住一篮子货币导致中国减持美元资产,那么美国的债券收益率可能就会上升。美国的中国抨击者们要求人民币再上调25%或者更多,他们这下应该小心了。这种大幅重新定值一定会将债券收益率推向一个更高的水平,从而严重损害美国经济。其实,如果说调整人民币币值会对美国的贸易逆差产生什么实际影响,那不会是通过重新定值本身,而是因为债券收益率升高压缩了国内需求。
美国的贸易逆差主要是开支过度和储蓄不足引起的,并非源自中国的不公平竞争。如果说美国贸易逆差的责任中国也有份儿,那不是通过压低汇率,而是通过降低债券收益率从而刺激家庭过度借贷和开支。从这个角度看,现在制定全球货币政策的是北京,而不是华盛顿。
第5题
America's children are generally improving, though child poverty has risen for the first time in a decade, according to the government's broadest measure of children's well-being.
The report shows that the teenage birth rate is down, young people are less likely to be involved in violent crimes and the death rate for this group has declined.
Experts say that teenagers who give birth are less likely to finish high school or to graduate from college than other girls of their age. Also, infants born to teenage mothers are more likely to be of low birth weight, which increases their chances of blindness, deafness, mental retardation, mental illness and cerebral palsy.
The study shows that young people were less likely to be victimized in a serious violent crime -- murder, rape, robbery or aggravated assault -- or to commit one. In 2002, there were 11 serious violent crimes per 1,000 people aged 12 to 17, compared with 15 per 1,000 youths in 2001.
Child mortality declined, too. In 2000, there were 18 deaths for every 100,000 children aged 5 to 14; a year later, there were 17 deaths for every 100,000 children in this age group. The infant mortality rate slightly increased. Seven of every 1,000 infants died before their first birthday in 2002, compared with a record low of 6.8 per. 1,000 in 2001.
Still, children are more likely to be overweight than they were before and child poverty has inched up after several years of decline.
The number of overweight children increased to 16 percent between 1999 and 2000, compared with from 11 percent in the early 1990s and 6 percent in the late 1970s.
That development "jeopardizes our children's future, making them vulnerable to chronic conditions such as diabetes and hypertension previously associated more with adults than with children," said Edward J. Sondik, director of the Center for Disease Control's National Center for Health Statistics.
The report said Mexican-American boys were at the highest risk, with 27 percent overweight followed by non-Hispanic girls at 23 percent.
The child obesity issue is a major cause for concern, a health expert said to reporters.
"This is a trend that's been at work since 1980 ... and as a trend, it shows no sign of reversing," the expert said.
Child poverty also grew, reaching 11. 6 million in 2002, compared with 11. 2 million a year earlier. Children living with single females continued to experience a higher poverty rate in 2002 than their counterparts in married-couple families -- 40 percent compared with 9 percent.
In 2002, 73 million children under 18 lived in the United States and made up 25 percent of the population.
第6题
science, information and society.
Today, science and information are opening up new horizons for human development. They do so through the exchange of scientific knowledge, the expansion of education and training, and the promotion of creativity and intercultural dialogue.
Our organization is required therefore to help enlarge the spread of science and information through better education.
Yet science education does not take place only in universities and institutions of higher education. An early start must be made if we are to increase the numbers of students who are interested in pursuing a scientific career.
The uneven distribution of science and information between the industrialized and developing countries also raises concerns. According to a UN Report, industrialized countries, with only 15% of the world's population, are home to 88% of all Internet users. Less than 1% of people in South Asia are online, even though it is home to one-fifth of the world's population, The situation is even worse in Africa. There are only one million Internet users on the entire continent whereas in the UK alone there are 10.5 million. In other words, capacity-building is vital for the developing world if they are to become knowledge societies.
These are some of the key issues that I hope you will discuss during the upcoming meeting. In particular, I am keen to hear your views on how this meeting can make a difference and, indeed, how science and information can make a difference in building knowledge societies.
Thank you.
第7题
身份证。
B:Yes,indeed.ID card is one of the most authoritative certificates issued by the government to show a person's status.It is very useful for a person who travels around the country.And I know that a driving license cannot be used to identify a person's status in China.
A:你说的对。和中国众多的人口相比,有驾照的还是少数。中国从1985年开始颁发身份证,到现在有八亿多居民拥有身份证。
B:ID cards are issued to the Chinese citizens aged 16 or above.Citizens who are below that age,if they want,can also apply.
A:生活中常会用到身份证。比如,坐飞机,住旅店,从邮局取包裹,登记交税,申请驾照,或是到了任何需要出示身份证的地方,都得用身份证。
B:After about 20 years since the issue of the first ID cards,the Ministry of Public Security decided to issue the second generation of ID cards starting from January this year.
A:新一代身份证技术含量高。和老卡不同,新卡可以机读。这是中国科学家多年研究的结果。
第8题
Meanwhile, the mortality rate for AIDS is 100 percent.
AIDS means that the immune system of a person has gone wrong. The immune system is the biological system in your body which fights off diseases. This system is composed mostly of what are commonly termed "white blood cells."
These cells are the hunters in the body. When a virus, such as the common cold, invades the body, the white blood cells rush to the invader and kill it.
While these blood cells are busy killing an invader, the body's immune system is said to "be under attack." If another virus or bacteria enters the body at the same time as the white blood cells are busy fighting off an invader, the second attacker has a better chance of injuring the rest of the body's system.
Scientists found the virus that causes AIDS and named it HIV. The HIV virus attacks the white blood cells and kills them, thus preventing these white cells from carrying on their important work of killing the other invading viruses.
We cannot tell if a person has an HIV infection just by looking at him. And here lies part of the problem about the spread of HIV infection among people. For at least the first few years after a person has contracted the HIV virus, there are no indications that the person has the HIV virus in his/her bloodstream.
However, during this time the person carrying the virus can pass it onto other people through intimate sexual relations or sharing blood with them.
Then how do we know if we have HIV or not? The answer is simple. Have an HIV blood test. This simple, painless AIDS test will take only a few minutes of your time, and, if you are at all in doubt about whether you might have contracted the HIV virus, it is a life-saving endeavor.
第9题
SECTION 2 Optional Translation (30 points)
Campaigning for votes in the western province of Maharashtra this month, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh of India vowed to give such a remarkable facelift to Mumbai, the state capital, that people "should forget talking about Shanghai."
Now that the election results are in, and a coalition led by Singh's Congress Party has retained power in the province, the prime minister must make good his promise, which will take more than a paint job.
The consulting firm McKinsey says it would cost $ 44 billion to make Mumbai a world-class city that can rank alongside Shanghai.
A revival of Mumbai, the country's trade and entertainment hub, is more than a matter of image. It's an economic necessity.
The city of 12 million fills two-fifths of the nation's corporate-tax kitty, yet a third of its people live in slums.
Mumbai's economy has lagged the national average growth rate of about 7 percent since 1998 — a level of underperformance that is impossible to reverse without mending the city's creaky infrastructure.
A choked, potholed Mumbai is symptomatic of a wider urban malaise. It isn't that a fast-growing economy like India can't find the resources to invest in its cities, where much of its economic growth is being produced.
By 2025, one of (the) two Indians would be living in an urban center, up from one in three now.
Morgan Stanley's chief economist, Stephen Roach, recently undertook a 115-mile, or 184-kilometer, car journey from Mumbai to the industrial city of Pune on a new expressway, which he says "is a huge cut above any of the other motor routes that I had been on in India."
Yet, by Chinese standards, the new road merits a "B minus, at best," he says. "If this is progress in closing India's infrastructure gap, the problem is even worse than I had imagined."
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